Decorated with Rusted-looking Plates Collar for Pitbull Walking
Fantastic Leather Pitbull Collar with Antique Plates
Considering your dog's right to walk safely and comfortable, our professional designers use soft, non-toxic and non-allergenic genuine leather. Smoothed with oils edges touch the sensitive dog's skin in a tender manner and don't cause irritation and cutting into the skin. There are no chemicals which can provoke allergy. At the same time, the collar is a super strong construction created to serve for many years! Due to the resistance to wear and tear, this collar features prolonged life.
This collar has been tested in real situations and showed an incredible resistance to overloads. The nickel plated D-ring and a traditional type buckle are as strong as the collar itself. Nickel covering reduces the possibility of rusting. Shiny silver-like color of nickel plated hardware perfectly suits the design of the collar and its decorations.
Decorative massive plates set to the accessory help your Pitbull to look unique. The antiqued decorations are also rust resistant and long servicing, as each of the plate was manually fixed with small rivet inside the tool.
Articles about American Pit Bull Terrier
Blue not an American Pit Bull Terrier color?
The Blue Paul or Blue Poll Terrier is here identified as a working Terrier for want of better classification. This strain was of the Bull Terrier family and, as the name suggested, came in a pleasing bluish slate color. The dog had all of the attributes of the Bull Terrier although it lacked the refinement of later animals. According to fragmentary descriptions now available, this Terrier was closer in conformation to the English Staffordshire Terrier than to the presently-known Bull Terrier. The Blue Paul was classed as a Scotch fighter. The greatest breeding activity took place in the lowlands between Kirkintilloch and Edinburgh where the strain existed and flourished for about seventy or eighty years. There is no doubt that the Blue Paul variety of Bull Terrier had Scotch blood in its veins. Brown, when speaking of the third variety of the Scotch Terrier, mentioned that it was a larger dog up to 18 inches at the withers, and had longer legs than the rest of the tribe. "It is from this breed that the best Bull-terriers have been produced," he wrote. One of the first notices of the Blue Paul is seen in Alken's colored etching on badger baiting (1820). Here a white Bull Terrier and a Blue Paul Terrier are shown engaged in a badger-baiting contest. The white is at grips with the badger and the handler is attempting to loose the unfortunate animal by biting the Bull Terrier's tail. By 1880, or thereabouts, the strain began to lose size and the old sixty-pound heavyweights were no longer seen. The lightweights that came into vogue were not up to the work and with this deterioration the strain slowly slipped into oblivion....to continue reading this article please click on here...